Flavoring lesson learned

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dawghouse

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I love wintergreen. I thought it would be a great idea to cut some of the 24mg JC Tennessee Cured I had left down to 18mg with some VG, add a little LorAnns wintergreen to the mix and I'd have a delightful mixture.

Well, wintergreen is not like adding a little strawberry. It has, and I'm sure this is true for everything in the mint family, the ability to take over. My first impression, "Wow, now that's some wintergreen!" By the time I got through one cart of the mixture...UGH! This could turn me off wintergreen forever! Totally my fault. I added about the same amount I would've added of coffee or a dozen other favors, however, the wintergreen has pretty much wiped out every other flavor in the mixture. Tried adding some chocolate...the wintergreen laughed at my silly attempt...it would not be deterred. I can't even imagine (nor shall I try) what this would be like direct dripped. I have now is something I can vape when I'm in the mood to be smacked in the head by a wintergreen mallet. I anticipate the remainder of this bottle will last me 40 years.

So...my lesson for today is...it is better to add a little, try it out, and if it's a bit weak you can always add a little more. Go the other direction and you do so at your own risk! So at least I learned something from this expensive experiment.
 

dawghouse

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Oh I'd be happy to share the recipe...you might not taste anything else for 3 days though.

I usually put on the order of a drop per ml or less...I usually experiment in a 3ml bottle to avoid exactly what I did and wasting a bunch of liquid, but I had about 10ml left in a 30ml bottle, so I added 5ml of VG and 10 drops of wintergreen...half of that would've been too much.
 
I find that hilarious because yesterday I bought some flavorings from Michaels and wanted to see how well they worked. I like mint, so I grabbed the spearmint flavor and dripped it straight..

....yeah... not a good idea.. my whole mouth tingled for about an hour.. it was like I had just been to the dentist.. there was so much mint that I actually felt ill.. lol

Less is more? Something like that.. ;-)
 

killdozerd11

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Jun 14, 2009
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variance is a thing you are going to get when you do small batches of
any mixture because even the ingredient's you use vary from batch to batch.

So if you make your own juice this will happen and if you are buying your juice from a small maker the same thing happens it's just in bigger batches 8-o

You learn all about this reloading ammunition especially match ammo.
Because gun powder burn rates vary from lot to lot
 

dawghouse

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BTW, for some reason lorann's "lemonade" is as strong as the mints/menthols. English Toffee is a strong flavor as well. Lorann's butterscotch make almost anything taste better for butterscotch lovers. Too sweet? Add "Butter" flavoring.

Cool...got some butterscotch I haven't tried yet. Thanks!
 

dawghouse

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I use this juice calculator all the time with GREAT succes in DIY juices. Works great, just enter your mix numbers in the boxes and it calculates the mixture for you. I would go easier on the mint group flavorings though.
www.todmuller.com/ejuice/ejuice.php

HAPPY MIXING ! ! !

Guess I should've known someone would've thought of this already. Only thing missing is a relative measure of flavor strength!8-o
 
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